Personal Narrative Assignment Sheet

“Stories, the argument goes, are the main way we make sense of things,

whether in thinking of our lives as a progression leading somewhere

or in telling ourselves what is happening in the world.”

–Jonathan Culler (Literary Theory: A Very Short Introduction 82)

THE ASSIGNMENT

Stories play a huge part in our lives, and have helped form the way that we've seen the world since we were kids. In many ways, the stories we hold on to can end up making meaning and can influence how we perceive the world. Our first unit focuses on telling a story from your knowledge, your experience.

FORMATTING

For this paper, you'll write a 5 page narrative. I expect Standard Paper Formatting, which is using 12pt. Times New Roman font. 1-inch margins all around, double-spaced. Your last name and the page number should appear as a header.

I expect all our assignments to be formatted with a correct MLA heading and an interesting title, like so:

LastName PageNumber
Your Name
Instructor's Name (Shaun Turner)
The Class (English 101)
The Date
A Title That Isn't Super Boring

In this assignment, I am looking for you to:

·  use clear, vivid details and sensory description

·  use a compelling introduction and a conclusion

·  use scene and exposition to move through your story

·  express ideas smoothly and fluently

RESEARCH

The main research resource for this assignment is yourself. Do some brainstorming. List some experiences that made you who you are. Talk with family and friends to gain their perspective on notable memories. As you narrow your list of possible ideas, you may find some real documents or images— such as emails, journal entries, pictures, or postcards—that might enrich your telling of a particular story.

AUDIENCE

We do not write for ourselves alone. Rather, we need to consider our narrative as part of a rhetorical triangle that encompasses the writer, the reader, and the subject matter. Consider what your readers already know about you and what they need to know. How much background information do you need to give to make the most impact? Also, as you write, notice what surprises you. If you, the writer, are surprised and intrigued, chances are that your reader will feel the same way. Beginning to consider your audience now, early in the course, will help in later assignments.

WRITING TECHNIQUE: VIVID DESCRIPTIONS

Reading: http://brevitymag.com/craft-essays/in-pursuit-of-memory/

Writing a good narrative requires that you craft a believable story. Including vivid details helps do this. Without description, writing is ordinary, forgettable writing. Without vivid, specific detail, writing won’t evoke emotion, or make the reader think.

When you add detail to your writing, you are showing the reader, not telling them what is happening, what the narrator is seeing, feeling, tasting…and so forth.

Here’s a good example of how poet Mary Oliver has added detail to make her poem come alive:

Birds

By Mary Oliver

You can be bad.

You can be unrepentant.

You only have to love.

We can talk about our sadness.

The world goes on.

Weather happens.

Nature exists.

Birds migrate.

And the world is there for you,

like the sounds of the migrating birds,

announcing where you fit in.

Just kidding. Actually, that's the poem if I removed every last bit of vivid description, stripping the words down to their most basic meaning.

Let's look to the next page for the actual poem.

Wild Geese

By Mary Oliver

You do not have to be good.

You do not have to walk on your knees

For a hundred miles through the desert repenting.

You only have to let the soft animal of your body

love what it loves.

Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.

Meanwhile the world goes on.

Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain

` are moving across the landscapes,

over the prairies and the deep trees,

the mountains and the rivers.

Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,

are heading home again.

Whoever you are, no matter how lonely

the world offers itself to your imagination,

calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting

over and over announcing your place

in the family of things.

One of the most important attribute of a good piece of writing is that it can include vivid description, such as sensory details, concrete and specific descriptions, figurative language, like simile and metaphor.

Techniques of Description

What are the techniques of description that you can use in your creative writing?

·  Sensory details- which appeals to the sense of sight, smell, touch, hearing, taste.

·  Concrete and specific details, not general and abstract.

·  Authentic details. Your details ought to be original and personal to you.

·  Precise details, getting it “just right.” Use a dictionary and thesaurus if you can't find the right words.

·  Don’t be literal all the time. Words can paint pictures and give insight to how you feel.

What to Avoid

·  Trite details (boring; not fresh or original)

·  Clichés (Language that has been overused in speech and writing)

·  Abstractions, which appeal to the intellect, not the senses. Use concrete and specific details instead.

·  Vague details. You must be precise and specific.